Housing market activity increases, but news not all good

Housing market activity increases, but news not all good

ASU

April 12, 2010

The Phoenix-area housing market is getting extremely busy, but the news is not all good. In March, the existing-home market saw more activity and foreclosures than it has since last July. The latest Realty Studies report from the W. P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University explains why.

“Historically, March is the portal month for the resale home season that usually lasts until August,” says Associate Professor of Real Estate Jay Butler, who authored the new report. “During this time, sales and median prices tend to increase as the buyers move to lock in a purchase before the start of schools, vacations and holidays. However, beyond the traditional rebound, March activity was driven by a diverse set of factors, including increased foreclosure activity, bargain hunters, short sales and the federal income tax credit for qualified home buyers.”

This March, almost 6,500 single-family homes were resold in the Phoenix area. That’s way up from just over 4,600 in February and about 5,900 in March of last year.

Foreclosures remained a major force in the market. Foreclosures and the resales of foreclosed-on homes accounted for 64 percent of the existing-home market activity. Almost 4,400 new foreclosures happened in March. That’s way up from just over 3,300 in February and about 2,700 in March of last year.

“Future foreclosure activity will be impacted by the level of job/income growth that could affect the ability of households to maintain their homes and a large number of adjustable-rate mortgages that are expected to reset in the coming months,” says Butler. “Further, homeowners, confronted with declining neighborhood values and restrictive debt amounts, could decide to walk away from their homes, especially after the end of the school year.”

The median price of single-family homes resold in the Valley was $142,500 in March. That’s up from $140,000 in February and only $127,000 last March.

In the condominium/townhouse market, things still look pretty bleak. More than 650 condos and townhomes in Maricopa County were foreclosed on in March. That’s up from 500 in February, and it’s more than twice the number of foreclosures last March, which was 295. The median condo/townhome price is now $94,000, down from $115,000 in March of last year.

FAIR HOUSING STATEMENT: Stone House Realty of Arizona supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act (Title VIII of the Civil Rights Act of 1968), which prohibits discrimination in the sale, rental, and financing of dwellings, and in other housing-related transactions, based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, and handicap.